It looks to me like Amway reps basically have two methods by which they can make enough money to make it worth their time.
1. Sell products.
2. Get people in your downstream who buy products or sell them themselves.
It sounds like your current position is largely the second one. You did enough recruiting early on to have something close to passive income now.
You're partly correct. For technical reasons to do with how we handled the business when I divorced I personally usually get more from (1) than (2). But by (1) I mean people registered as customers (not as IBOs) still purchase products through Amway and I'm credited as the salesperson, even though the active "selling" happened many years ago. Amway has 450+ exclusive products you can't get anywhere else, so people who like them keep buying them from Amway.
I'm curious how far out the "message" has spread from you. I'm asking not out of curiosity about the business model, but out of curiosity around the recruiting model. Were the people you recruited interested enough to in turn recruit other people, and if so, how far out did the chain go? Did the chain stop or is it still going? It's a sociological query, not a business or economics one.
It's not quite so straightforward, as sometimes for stratigic reasons we might recruit someone and put them downline of someone else. It's less profitable initially but can have longer term benefits. I have a "leg" in the US that continues to grow, albeit slowly. Last time I looked, which is a while ago, it was something like 20 or 30 levels "deep". Because of the structure I rarely make any money out of this, and on occasions I do it's small (tens of dollars) but if I ever chose to build Amway again it would provide a useful foundation.
MLM recruiting meetings borrow a lot from religious revivals, and in many ways an MLM program, particularly the scammy ones, can resemble a religion more than a business. This is not unique to MLM or direct selling, but I'm fascinated by the often creepy ways religious thinking intersects with business and commerce.
This has more to do with personalities than the model per se, though there is some cross-infection. Two of the most successful networkers in the United States were Bill Britt and Dexter Yager, with Amway. Both were very committed "southern" evangelical christians. Naturally enough their "circle" includes people with similar beliefs, so they developed very large Amway networks full of evangelical christians, and they proudly wore their faith, and politics, on their sleeves and used their Amway networks to proselytize their faith and politics, and their religious networks to proselytize Amway.
The approach works brilliantly with people of a similar mindset, but is alienating for those (like myself) who are not. Virtually all of the criticism of Amway that's around (including all of the critical books and all but one or two minor lawsuits) have originated with this "evangelical" Amway network. My research indicates it never represented a majority of Amway but it has had a hugely disproportionate affect on perceptions of Amway.
The influence spreads outside of Amway however, as a great many "leaders" in other network marketing companies had their first exposure to the industry from this Amway group.
For example, the knee-jerk "socialism bad" reaction many people have is based more on indoctrination during the cold war than an honest assessment of, for example, if it really IS better for the populace and business to have single-payer health care. The religious thinking is preventing honest debate.
Yes, I lost several republican friends on facebook during the last election because I dared challenge their indoctrinated beliefs.
The same thing is happening here. Your early defenses of Amway consisted more of attacking critics than in providing any actual information.
Actually I provided a lot of information, but primarily through links to other sources. It's quite tiring seeing the same old myths repeated over and over again, even though some of them were addressed by authoritive investigations
decades ago. I get
extremely frustrated that otherwise rational people in the skeptic movement often simply believe these myths without questioning them. Take the VanDruff paper and the MLM "pyramid saturation" image. Even without understanding
why it is wrong, it should be patently obvious to anyone with a modicum of intelligence that it
must be wrong, since there are many MLMs that are many decades old, including one that's been operating continuously for nearly 80 years!
You engaged religiously. The people who automatically assumed all MLM programs are scams were doing the same. Fortunately on a forum such as this the pattern can be broken by focusing on hard data. That's why I was asking for the math. That's why Joecool's post about the 6-4-2 plan is probably the most useful one here. It provides a mathematical base that demonstrates a viable profit model with Amway, even though it's quite modest for the people at the bottom of the stream.
Joecool is a virulent anti-Amway critic who runs several blogs attacking the company, and has done so for nearly a decade. We have a history. He ended up on jref because he realised I was posting here and discussing MLM when it arose, so he joined primarily to attack me. I have him on ignore here, so if he says something you'd particularly like me to address, you'll have to point it out for me! I engage him on other forums that are dedicated to the topic, discussing MLM isn't why I'm a jref member. Though some people here could use some educating!
I'd like to focus on the objective data. Take a look at Joecool's numbers. Set aside the ad hominem attacks and tell us, with actual numbers, what's missing from what he wrote. You made it clear you find it incomplete. Complete it for us.
The 6-4-2/79 people 100PV model is purely a model used to explain the concept. It does not at all reflect the reality of how an Amway business is built or operated. It is not the only example model people use.
Now, some MLMs have quite complicated setups, and in my opinion the more complicated, the more likely they are to be scams. The Amway model is actually extremely simple and really no different to traditional business, it just appears complex when it's explained sometimes and because of some additions that make it
less risky than most traditional businesses.
How does it work?
You buy products and sell them. As a registered distributor you get them for up to 35% off recommended retail price. If you buy larger volumes you get volume discounts up to another 30%, increasing gross margins.
That's it, that's how the money is made.
I have all sorts of data and statistics from various sources, more than happy to share if you're interested in an open-minded discussion.